Ranjit Singh,also spelled Runjit Singh, byname Lion Of The of the Punjab ( born Nov. 13, 1780 , Budrukhan, or Gujrānwāla, India—died Gujranwala [now in Pakistan]—died June 27, 1839 , Lahore [now in Pakistan] ) founder and maharaja (1801–39) of the Sikh kingdom of the Punjab.

Ranjit Singh was the only child of Maha Singh, on whose death in 1792 he became chief of the ŚukerchakīāsShukerchakias, a Sikh group. His inheritance included Gujrānwāla Gujranwala town and the surrounding villages, now in Pakistan. At 15 he married the daughter of a chieftain of the Kanhayas, and for many years his affairs were directed by his ambitious mother-in-law, the widow Sada Kaur. A second marriage, to a girl of the Nakkais, made Ranjit Singh preeminent among the clans of the Sikh confederacy.

In July 1799 he seized Lahore, the capital of the Punjab (now the capital of Punjab province, Pak.). The Afghan king, Shāh Shah Zamān, confirmed Ranjit Singh as governor of the city; in 1801, however, Ranjit Singh proclaimed himself maharaja of the Punjab. He had coins struck in the name of the Sikh GurūsGurus, the revered line of Sikh leaders, and proceeded to administer the state in the name of the Sikh commonwealth. A year later he captured Amritsar, the most important commercial entrepôt in northern India and sacred city of the Sikhs. Thereafter he proceeded to subdue the smaller Sikh and Pashtun (Afghan) principalities that were scattered over the Punjab. But his later forays east were checked by the English, with whom he signed the Treaty of Amritsar (1809), fixing the Sutlej River as the eastern boundary of his territories.

Ranjit Singh then turned his ambitions toward the north and west, against the Pashtuns. In the summer of 1818 his troops captured the city of Multān Multan and six months later entered the Pashtun citadel, PeshāwarPeshawar. In July 1819 he finally expelled the Pashtuns from the Vale of Kashmir. By 1820 he had consolidated his rule over the whole Punjab between the Sutlej and the Indus rivers.

All of Ranjit Singh’s conquests were achieved by Punjabi armies composed of Sikhs, Muslims, and Hindus. His commanders were also drawn from different religious communities, as were his Cabinet cabinet ministers. In 1820 Ranjit Singh began to modernize his army, using European officers to train the infantry and the artillery. The modernized Punjabi army fought well in campaigns in the North-West Frontier (on the Afghanistan border). Ranjit Singh added Ladākh Ladakh (a region of eastern Kashmir) to his kingdom in 1834, and his forces repulsed an Afghan counterattack on Peshāwar Peshawar in 1837.

In 1838 he agreed to a treaty with the British viceroy Lord Auckland to restore Shāh Shah Shojāʿ to the Afghan throne at KābulKabul. In pursuance of this agreement, the British Army of the Indus entered Afghanistan from the south, while Ranjit Singh’s troops went through the Khyber Pass and took part in the victory parade in KābulKabul.

Shortly afterward, Ranjit Singh was taken ill, and he died at Lahore in June 1839, almost exactly 40 years after he had entered the city as a conqueror. In little more than six years after his death, the Sikh state he had created collapsed because of the internecine strife of rival chiefs.

Lepel H. Griffin, Ranjit Singh (1892); N.K. Sinha, Ranjit Singh (1933); and Khushwant Singh, Ranjit Singh, Maharajah of the Punjab (1962), are three conventional biographies. For an eyewitness account of the personality and court of Ranjit Singh, see Emily Eden, Up the Country: Letters Written to Her Sister from the Upper Provinces of India, 2 vol. (1866, reissued 1978); and , is an eyewitness account of the personality and court of Ranjit Singh. W.G. Osborne, The Court and Camp of Runjeet Sing (1840, reprinted 1973), also delves into his personal life.